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© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Chapter 15 Government Spending and its Financing.

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Presentation on theme: "© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Chapter 15 Government Spending and its Financing."— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Chapter 15 Government Spending and its Financing

2 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-2 Chapter Outline The Government Budget: Some Facts and Figures –Outlays and receipts, deficit Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy –Aggregate demand, capital formation and labor supply Government Deficits and Debt (financing) Deficits and Inflation(skip)

3 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-3 The Government Budget: Some Facts and Figures Government outlays; three categories of government expenditures (1/3 of GDP) –Government purchases (G) 1/6 investments and 5/6 expenditures –Transfer payments (TR): not exchange for goods social security benefits, pensions for government retirees, welfare payments –Net interest payments (INT) Interest payments on bonds – Interest earned from loans –Also: Subsidies less surpluses of government enterprises; relatively small, so we ignore it

4 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-4 Taxes –Four principal categories Personal taxes (income taxes and property taxes) Contributions for social insurance Taxes on production and imports Corporate taxes The Government Budget: Some Facts and Figures

5 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-5 Figure 15.2 Taxes: Federal, state, and local, 1940-2005

6 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-6 Taxes –The composition of outlays and taxes: the Federal government versus state and local governments To see the overall picture of government spending, we usually combine Federal, state, and local government spending But the composition of the Federal government budget is quite different from state and local government budgets (Table 15.2) The Government Budget: Some Facts and Figures

7 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-7 Table 15.2 Government Receipts and Current Expenditures, 2005

8 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-8 Deficits and surpluses –Deficit  outlays – tax revenues  government purchases  transfers + net interest – tax revenues  G  TR  INT – T (15.1) –Primary deficit  outlays – net interest – tax revenues  government purchases + transfers – tax revenues  G  TR – T (15.2) -- Current deficit = Deficit – government investments = Current expenditures + transfers + net interest – tax revenue -- Primary current deficit = Current deficit – net interest -- Primary: excluding net interest -- Current: excluding investments (capital goods) The Government Budget: Some Facts and Figures

9 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-9 Deficits and surpluses –The total deficit tells the amount the government must borrow to cover all its expenditures –The primary deficit tells if the government’s receipts are enough to cover its current purchases and transfers –The primary deficit ignores interest payments, because those are payments for past government spending (Fig. 15.3) The Government Budget: Some Facts and Figures

10 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-10 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Fiscal policy and aggregate demand –An increase in government purchases increases aggregate demand by shifting the IS curve up –The effect of tax changes depends on the economic model Classical economists accept the Ricardian equivalence proposition that lump-sum tax changes have no effect on national saving or on aggregate demand Keynesians think a tax cut is likely to increase consumption and decrease saving, thus increasing aggregate demand

11 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-11 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Fiscal policy and aggregate demand –Classicals and Keynesians disagree about using fiscal policy to stabilize the economy Classicals oppose activist policy while Keynesians favor it But even Keynesians admit that fiscal policy is difficult to use –There is a lack of flexibility, because much of government spending is committed years in advance –There are long time lags, because the political process takes time to make changes –Fiscal policy may not be effective, then how to stabilize the economy?

12 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-12 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Fiscal policy and aggregate demand –Automatic stabilizers and the full-employment deficit Automatic stabilizers cause fiscal policy to be countercyclical by changing government spending or taxes automatically One example is unemployment insurance, which causes transfers to rise in recessions The most important automatic stabilizer is the income tax system, since people pay less tax when their incomes are low in recessions, and they pay more tax when their incomes are high in booms A stabilizer of macro economy not a stabilizer of budget balance. So need to get a less(more) biased (consistent) deficit measure?

13 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-13 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Fiscal policy and aggregate demand –Because of automatic stabilizers, the government budget deficit rises in recessions and falls in booms The full-employment deficit is a measure of what the government budget deficit would be if the economy were at full employment So the full-employment deficit doesn’t change with the business cycle, only with changes in government policy regarding spending and taxation The actual budget deficit is much larger than the full- employment budget deficit in recessions (Fig. 15.5)

14 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-14 Figure 15.5 Full-employment and actual budget deficits, 1960-2005

15 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-15 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Government capital formation –Fiscal policy affects the economy through the formation of government capital—long-lived physical assets owned by the government, like roads, schools, and sewer systems –Also, fiscal policy affects human capital formation through expenditures on health, nutrition, and education –Data on government investment include only physical capital, not human capital In 2005, 2/3 of federal government investment was on national defense and 1/3 on nondefense capital Most federal government investment is in equipment, but most state and local government investment is for structures

16 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-16 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Incentive effects of fiscal policy –Average versus marginal tax rates Average tax rate  total taxes / pretax income Marginal tax rate  taxes due from an additional dollar of income 25% on income over $10,000 Income $18,000 –tax due: 8000*25%=2,000 –Average tax rate = 2000/18000=11.1% –Marginal tax rate = 25%

17 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-17 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Incentive effects of fiscal policy –Average versus marginal tax rates The distinction between average and marginal tax rates affects people’s decisions about how much labor to supply –If the average tax rate increases, with the marginal tax rate held constant, a person will increase labor supply –The higher average tax rate causes an income effect –With lower income, a person consumes less and wants less leisure (a normal good), so he or she works more –The labor supply curve shifts right

18 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-18 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Incentive effects of fiscal policy –Average versus marginal tax rates If the marginal tax rate increases, with the average tax rate held constant, a person will decrease labor supply –The higher marginal tax rate causes a substitution effect –With a lower after-tax reward for working, a person wants to work less (lower “price” or opportunity cost of leisure) –The labor supply curve shifts left

19 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-19 Government Spending, Taxes, and the Macroeconomy Tax-induced distortions and tax rate smoothing –In the absence of taxes, the free market works efficiently Taxes change economic behavior, reducing welfare Thus tax-induced deviations from free-market outcomes are called distortions –The difference between the number of hours a worker would work without taxes and the number of hours he or she actually works when there is a tax reflects the tax distortion –The higher the tax rate, the greater the distortion –Tax rate smoothing: Fiscal policymakers would like to raise the needed amount of government revenue while minimizing distortions

20 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-20 Government Deficits and Debt The growth of the government debt –The deficit is the difference between expenditures and revenues in any fiscal year –The debt is the total value of outstanding government bonds on a given date –The deficit is the change in the debt in a year  B  nominal government budget deficit (15.3) B  nominal value of government bonds outstanding

21 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-21 Government Deficits and Debt The growth of the government debt –A useful measure of government’s indebtedness that accounts for the ability to pay off the debt is the debt–GDP ratio The U.S. debt–GDP ratio (Fig. 15.6) fell from over 1 after World War II to a low point in the mid-1970s From 1979 to 1995, the debt–GDP ratio rose significantly, but it fell from 1995 to 2001, then began to rise in 2002

22 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-22 Figure 15.6 Ratio of Federal debt to GDP, 1939- 2005

23 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-23 Government Deficits and Debt The growth of the government debt –Change in debt–GDP ratio  deficit/nominal GDP – [(total debt/nominal GDP) × growth rate of nominal GDP] (15.4) –So two things cause the debt–GDP ratio to rise A high deficit relative to GDP A slow rate of GDP growth

24 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-24 Government Deficits and Debt The growth of the government debt –During World War II, large deficits raised the debt–GDP ratio –For the next 35 years, deficits were small or negative, and GDP growth was rapid, so the debt–GDP ratio fell –During the 1980s and early 1990s, the debt–GDP ratio rose because of high deficits –Large surpluses reduced the debt-GDP ratio in the late 1990s, but large deficits raised it beginning in 2002

25 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-25 Government Deficits and Debt Application: Social Security: How can it be fixed? –The Social Security system may not be able to pay future promised benefits (2017 more spending than tax and 2040 exhausted) –The system is mostly pay as you go, so that most taxes collected today go to paying benefits to current retirees— there is only a small trust fund –The pay-as-you-go system worked as long as the number of workers greatly exceeded the number of retirees, but demographic changes will soon decrease the ratio of workers to retirees –The result will be payouts in excess of tax revenue (Fig. 15.7)

26 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-26 Figure 15.7 Social security cost and tax revenue as a percent of GDP, 1990-2080

27 © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 15-27 Government Deficits and Debt Application: Social Security: How can it be fixed? –Fixing the social security system Increase tax revenue by raising taxes, but this distorts labor supply decisions Increase the rate of return by investing in the stock market, but this is risky Reduce benefits by increasing retirement age Allow people to invest their own funds in individual accounts –But then there would not be enough funds to pay current retirees


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